Department of Pediatrics (S Worsley, EL McMahon, and WJ Heerman), Monroe Carell Jr. Children's Hospital, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tenn.
Department of Pediatrics (S Worsley, EL McMahon, and WJ Heerman), Monroe Carell Jr. Children's Hospital, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tenn.
Acad Pediatr. 2024 Nov-Dec;24(8):1266-1275. doi: 10.1016/j.acap.2024.05.009. Epub 2024 May 31.
National child obesity rates continue to climb. While neighborhood factors are known to influence childhood weight, more work is needed to further our understanding of these relationships and inform intervention and policy approaches reflective of complex real-world contexts.
To evaluate the associations between neighborhood components and childhood overweight/obesity, we analyzed sequential, cross-sectional data from the National Survey of Children's Health collected annually between 2016 and 2021. To characterize the complexity of children's neighborhood environments, several interrelated neighborhood factors were examined: amenities, detractions, support, and safety. We used ordinal logistic regression models to evaluate the associations between these exposures of interest and childhood weight status, adjusting for potential confounders.
Our analytic sample contained 96,858 children representing a weighted population of 28,228,799 children ages 10-17 years. Child weight status was healthy in 66.5%, overweight in 16.8%, and obese in 17.2%. All four neighborhood factors were associated with child weight status. The odds of overweight or obesity generally increased with a decreasing number of amenities and increasing number of detractions, with the highest adjusted odds ratio seen with no amenities and all three possible detractions (1.71; 95% confidence interval [1.31, 2.11]).
Multiple factors within a child's neighborhood environment were associated with child weight status in this sample representative of the US population aged 10-17 years. This suggests the need for future research into how policies and programs can support multiple components of a healthy neighborhood environment simultaneously to reduce rates of childhood overweight/obesity.
全国儿童肥胖率持续攀升。虽然邻里因素已知会影响儿童体重,但我们仍需要进一步了解这些关系,并提出干预和政策措施,以反映复杂的现实环境。
为了评估邻里因素与儿童超重/肥胖之间的关联,我们分析了 2016 年至 2021 年期间每年收集的全国儿童健康调查的连续横断面数据。为了描述儿童邻里环境的复杂性,我们研究了几个相互关联的邻里因素:便利设施、减分项、支持和安全。我们使用有序逻辑回归模型评估了这些感兴趣的暴露因素与儿童体重状况之间的关联,同时调整了潜在的混杂因素。
我们的分析样本包含 96858 名儿童,代表了 10-17 岁的 28228799 名儿童的加权人口。儿童体重状况健康的占 66.5%,超重的占 16.8%,肥胖的占 17.2%。所有四个邻里因素都与儿童体重状况有关。超重或肥胖的可能性通常随着便利设施数量的减少和减分项数量的增加而增加,而调整后的最高比值见于没有便利设施和所有三个可能的减分项(1.71;95%置信区间 [1.31, 2.11])。
在这个代表美国 10-17 岁人群的样本中,儿童邻里环境中的多个因素与儿童体重状况有关。这表明需要进一步研究如何同时支持健康邻里环境的多个组成部分的政策和方案,以降低儿童超重/肥胖率。